Indiana Suspends, Fines Two Veterinarians Four Months After Offense Date

Stewards in Indiana issued 60-day suspensions and $5,000 fines to two veterinarians on Nov. 7 after determining they violated commission rules prohibiting possession of non-FDA approved drugs.

Drs. Cynthia Loomis and Nicole Wettstein, both practitioners at Equine Medical Associates, were also handed summary suspensions banning them from racetrack grounds.

The rulings also cited both for “possession of non-FDA approved compounds, where there are FDA approved, commercially available medications to appropriately treat a horse; possession of improperly compounded substances which contain non-FDA approved ingredients; and, possession of drugs that do not meet the labeling requirements established in IHRC regulations.”

The rulings both list an infraction date of July 5, 2022. That is one day after Loomis was summarily suspended alongside trainer/owner/agent Marvin Johnson after officials alleged she treated two of his horses on race day. The commission ultimately failed to bring a charge against her regarding that alleged treatment.

When reached by the Paulick Report on Nov. 14, Loomis said that a tack room used by her and Wettstein for medication and equipment storage at Horseshoe Indianapolis was locked up at the time of the alleged infraction related to Johnson. When the commission failed to bring a charge against her related to that case but sought to extend her summary suspension through the end of this year, Loomis went before an administrative law judge in an attempt to lift the summary suspension. On Oct. 15, an administrative law judge found in Loomis' favor and ended the summary suspension, citing a time limit the commission had to bring a formal charge.

Loomis says it was after this Oct. 15 decision from the administrative law judge that the Indiana commission notified her they intended to unlock and search the storage room.

The November ruling stems from that search, and Loomis says it refers to compounded phenylbutazone paste and powder in that tack room. Loomis said she had the drug in compounded forms because the mass-produced version was on long-term backorder in July.

Compounded versions of mass-produced FDA-approved drugs are considered legal in some circumstances when there is a significant or long-term supply chain disruption of the commercial version of the drug.

She also said investigators found expired isoxsuprine, which was in the storage room awaiting a trip back to her primary base in Kentucky for appropriate disposal.

“It's absurd, is what it is. It's just another hoop to jump through,” said Loomis. “This is their last attempt to keep me suspended in some way, to keep me off the grounds through the end of the meet. Which is ridiculous, because I don't want to go back to Indiana anyway.”

Loomis and Wettstein were both cited since they both have their names on the storage room. Wettstein was served with medication labeling violations on July 15, but then postponed her hearing until October.

Both veterinarians have appealed the ruling.

“It is clear that the IHRC, after having been denied the ability to renew Dr. Loomis's original summary suspension from July 4, 2022, set a hearing regarding other alleged violations as a way to circumvent the lift of the original summary suspension and re-suspend Loomis,” read the appeal in part. “Dr. Loomis has been and continues to be irreparably harmed because she cannot work in Indiana or in any other jurisdiction and her reputation and excellent veterinarian record have been irreversibly tarnished. To date, the IHRC has not filed an administrative complaint against Dr. Loomis for any alleged infractions which occurred in July of this year.”

The post Indiana Suspends, Fines Two Veterinarians Four Months After Offense Date appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Keeneland November Sets New Mark

The Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale ended its eighth session Monday with cumulative sales of $205 million, surpassing total sales of $203 million recorded for last year's entire 10-day auction. On Monday, 260 head sold for $4,313,300, down from the corresponding session in 2021 when 260 generated $4,363,200. Average dipped slightly from $16,782 to $16,590. The median of $11,000 decreased 8.33% from last year's $12,000.

Late in Monday's session, a daughter of Mshawish led the way during the first day of Book. Offered as Hip 2975, Taylor Avenue was secured for $130,000 by CF Farms from the Taylor Made Sales Agency consignment. In foal to Speightstown, the stakes-placed filly is out of Aqualane Shores (Friends Lake), the dam of stakes winner Respect the Hustle (Colonel John). In her most recent trip to the sales ring, the 4-year-old sold for $10,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky sale in February.

The second-highest priced offering on the day was Hip 2717, a 3-year-old filly by Flatter who realized a $75,000 final bid from her breeder, Claiborne Farm. Consigned by Winter Quarter Farm, agent, Culdee is out of MSP Bend (Arch), dam of MGSW and track record holder Clearly Now (Horse Greeley) in addition to GSW Bendable (Horse Greeley). The filly was offered by Claiborne to the 2020 Keeneland September Sale, where she brought $180,000. Culdee's brother, by Curlin, sold for $575,000 at the September sale one year earlier.

Leading the youngsters during Monday's session was Hip 3030, a filly by freshman Bolt d'Oro, who was consigned by Elm Tree Farm. The grey is out of Winning Doe (Running Stag), a half-sister to champion grass runners World Approval (Northern Afleet) and Miesque's Approval (Miesque's Son) in addition to GSWs Revved Up (Sultry Song) and Za Approval (Ghostzapper). The Mar. 27 foal is a half-sister to stakes winner and graded placed We Deer You (Hat Trick {Jpn}).

Heading the boys was Hip 2760, who brought $65,000 from Reeves Thoroughbred Racing. Consigned by Trackside Farm (Tom Evans), agent, the colt is by GI Belmont S. winner Tapwrit, represented by his first crop of juveniles in 2022. Out of unraced Fondness (Elusive Quality), the Mar. 4 foal is a half-brother to Discreetness (Discreet Cat). A half-sister to Group 1 scorer Bahamian Pirate (Housebuster) and GSW and MGISP Strong Hope (Grand Slam), Fondness hails from the family of multiple European champion El Gran Senor.

Cumulatively, 1,826 horses have sold for $205,696,600, up 7.96% from last year's $190,531,700 for the comparable period when 1,950 horses sold. The average of $112,649 increased 15.29% from $97,709 in 2021, while the median of $50,000 remained unchanged from last year.

The November sale continues through Wednesday and is followed by a horses of racing age sale Thursday. Bidding begins daily at 10 a.m. Thursday's auction begins at noon.

The post Keeneland November Sets New Mark appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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The Importance Of Poker Position And How To Bet.

Texas Holdem is all about people and position. All rounded holdem players agree that position in no limit texas holdem is fundamentally important. Playing your hole cards in late position can be much more profitable than in early poker position. The reason because much more information is gathered before acting. For example, I was playing a $1-$2 no limit cash game at a local spot. I limped in with 2 , 9 unsuited (a terrible hand) on the dealer button, just to see some action. Flop came down A -A -4 . A player in early position made a $15 bet. Two players fold and it was my turn to act. I should have folded, but his play seemed a bit off. I identified this player as a weak-tight player earlier, and typically if he had the best hand he would just check. I thought, ‘if he held trips, why would he raise so early instead of checking and try to trap other players.’ I didn’t put him on an Ace this time, so I called. The turn came down with a 7 , making it A -A -4 -7 . My opponent made another bet of $20. I hesitated a bit, but made a split decision to reraise another $30 on top of his $20. He folds and I take the pot down.

Playing late position gives you an idea where you stand by observing how players react and bet. On the other hand, players at early position may us their poker position to check-raise the late positioned aggressors and trap them later at the end. In Texas Holdem, both ends, late and early should be played cautiously regardless.

How to Bet

A bet is a declaration that you have a good hand. When a player raises, they are proclaiming they have the best hand and they’ll wager money on it. Typically, players are supposed to raise when they have a good hand and those who have a bad hand are suppose to fold. If everyone stuck to this policy, there would be no need for any strategy. However, most players play contrary to this idea and attempt to be cunning and deceptive. The following descriptions are strategic plays:

Blind-Stealing: When you are on the dealer button and only you have the blinds are left, a raise is often called blind-stealing. This may cause the blinds to fold, stead of simply checking. This strategy will never make you rich, but ends the game fast so you may be dealt a new hand (and adds a few chips to your stack).

Blind stealing is a tremendous tactic within a tournament game, especially when the blinds become very high.

Steal-Raise: If you are the last to act and all players have checked to you, a simple raise can limit the number of active players or take the pot. This move is only recommended if you’ve hit a piece of the flop and want to see where you stand.

Check-Raising: The act of checking to your opponent with the intention of luring them to raise, so that you can reraise them back. Your intention is to lure them to feel secure about their hand and betting so you can reraise back at them. For example, I was in early position and was holding AQ and the flop came down as Q-A-A. I didn’t want to scare anyone out of the pot so I checked and waited for someone to bet. My opponent bets, and I raise him back with a substantial amount that kept him thinking for a minute.

The Opener: Raising when you’re first to act. This strategy is used to limit the number of players and is an information bet (usually players with strong hands will call). Many will fold, but the ones remaining will either be equally aggressive or truly have a good hand.

Squeezing: Raising when suspecting another player or players may be on a draw (players looking for a straight, flush, etc). Raising discourages players taking a chance on their draws. For example, I was holding a suited hand J10, and the flop came down as 2-A-8 with two clubs on the community. One more club would have gave me a strong flush possibility, but my opponent bet a strong amount that wasn’t worth gambling if I didn’t hit my flush.

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